Great South West Walk, Day 1 – Portland to Cubby’s Camp, 21km

And now here we go again! I’ve bussed it up to Portland and am  going to have a crack at the 250km long GSWW.

I’m not going to lie.  It is a real struggle this morning to feel motivated.  The wind is still howling, rain is predicted, the bag is heavy having been loaded up with 6 days worth of food, there is every chance I will be completely alone on the trail, and I’m tucked into a nice warm bed. Yes, this was a real test of my fortitude this morning.  What got me moving in the end was the thought that all of this is leading to Scotland next year.  And I’m pretty certain this is exactly the sort of weather I’m going to encounter.  Time to get moving.

Start of the next trail!

The rain does begin almost immediately.  I’m in my full rain gear today, but it’s still just a drag.  Especially as I’m walking through Portland to get to the outskirts of town.  I feel like such a dick.  It’s absolutely bucketing down, the wind is blasting and here I am trudging along with a huge backpack on, ready to go on some outdoor pursuit.  I just know that every person, in every car, sees me and is no doubt thinking “What an idiot…..” And it feels a bit like I might be.  Is this really a holiday?

Leaving Portland near Nun’s Beach
Looking back towards Portland
Bluff Lighthouse
The rain and swells have led to erosion of the sandstone which makes the inner shore appear pink in colour

After a solid drenching for a couple of hours, the rain starts to ease up a bit.  And it is great timing, because I’m just about to leave the highly habited area and move into the forest.

Almost immediately I can feel my angst diminishing, as I look at the tall trees, listen to the birds, seemingly also calling with joy also that the rain has stopped, and taking the first break of the day.

The walk to Cubby’s from here is essentially a walk through verge forest.  Not virgin forest.  Verge forest.  Corridors of forest between neighboring properties and the railway line for the most part.  It’s nice.  Very flat, practically no hills at all.  And well signposted, so the walking is on very easy trail.

Crossing this bridge was a real test of nerves!
Was quite difficult to stay on this, with the wind pushing hard!
Holding on to get to the “toilet” marked on the map, really wasn’t worth it….

It starts to rain again just as I reach camp, so I sit and relax under the shelter, nibbling on my food and stretching the legs until it passes.  A quick look at the walkers registration book tells me that the last people through were a tour group of 10 who passed through 5 days ago.  Yep, this is going to be a practice in solitude I think….

It rains on and off all afternoon, but I enjoy whiling the day away listening to podcasts and starting a book that I have been saving just for this walk (The Salt Path by Raynor Winn).  Yep.  Things are pretty good.

Hoem

Great Ocean Walk, Day 6 – Devils Kitchen to The Twelve Apostles, 16km

“For the night is dark and full of terrors”

GOT

Well, I spoke waaaaayyyy too soon.  Another night of cyclonic winds belting their way like malevolent sprites through the Devil’s Kitchen.  It is very hard to describe what it is like being in the forest when 80km hour winds are howling through.  My tent, through luck rather than design, was being protected by a stout, dense tea tree shrub.  The trees creak and groan though.  Debris hits the tent with a flying thud.  The rain is not a gentle pitter patter that will lull you right to sleep.  It’s more lull, LULL, LULL, lull, LUll, luLL, LULL, LULL, LULL, LULL, LULL!!, LULL!!, LULL!!!.  You get the picture.

With little sleep, I did not need the alarm to wake me at 6am.  By torchlight I packed my things and thanked my lucky stars for my protected site.  James and Raye were already up when I left, forced back into the one-man tent again.  Augustin had left some time during the night.  Marg had not yet emerged, which was a good sign.

The trail was complete havoc.  With trees down everywhere it was difficult to get into any sort of rhythm.  Each downed tree was a problem to be solved.  Under, over, around, push through, balance precariously, try and jump, get down off the bridge and into the creek, fight and move and bush bash.

Would never tire of these views
Home stretch!
Track views

I arrived at the Gellibrand River in good time.  Very good time.  I would have to wait hours for the bus at this pace.  No sooner had I had thoughts to slow down and dawdle, then the first splats of rain began to fall.  I hustled, hoping to make shelter, but I was in a no-mans zone of roadway and bridge construction.  The rain became fierce, bitter and freezing, soaking my shoes instantly. 

Views of Gellibrand River
Shoreside
Rain starting right about now…

With the rain, there went any thoughts of dawdling.  My mission now, reach the end, change into warm gear and put on my new waterproof socks.

The final five kilometers of walking was epic.  The track, easy trail through beautiful cliff top scrub.  The weather, madness, with cyclonic rain one minute and clear blue skies the next.  The scenery, although shrouded in mist, amazing, as I spied the Twelve Apostles for the first time.

First view of the Apostles

I reached the semi-end of the walk. In a gesture I love, instead of at the end of the trail at the information centre, the marker for the trail end is located a little further away on a private cliff top viewing spot.  Here, completers of the trail can hoot and holler, take as many photos as they like, and soak up the feeling of achievement away from the public eye.  Whilst I did do all of those things, it was near impossible, with wind pushing so hard it was difficult to stay on your feet, let alone hold the camera steady.  I laughed and shouted at the absurdness of it all.  Wow oh wow, did I feel alive!

Hooray!
But too difficult to do anything!
The Apostles are close now!

And just like that it was over.  Deposited brusquely into the highly touristed area of Gibson’s Steps, before the final, short push to the Apostles.

From Gibson’s Steps
From Gibson’s Steps
Part of the Twelve
Simple but amazing
Haha! Too windy to understand a thing!

Here, the hikers gathered one by one.  Congratulations were made and hot coffees were drunk.  Marg made sure to thank me profusely for the help with the tent pole.  I recognised the look in her eyes….someone who doesn’t like to ask for help.  Like me.  Someone who has had to accept help, surrendered to that, and found it in abundance on the trail.  Like me.  It was a really nice feeling to have been able to pay all the kindnesses I’ve received over the years, forward. 

We all said our final goodbyes and I headed to the bus stop, feeling completely content and happy.  The Great Ocean Walk definitely rates up there as one of the best walks I’ve done.  The scenery, the tracks, the camp sites, the crazy weather, the camaraderie. As I said to the others, “This is one we’ll all be talking about for a long time!” 

The crew.  Me, James, Raye, Marg (and missing is the Mexican, Augustin, who, as it turns out, just headed off early to catch an early bus)

PS.  My feet were dry, warm and toasty for the whole bus ride thanks to my new waterproof socks!

Great Ocean Walk, Day 5 – Ryans camp to Devils Kitchen, 14km

Well, we all survived the night.  In fact, comparatively, even though the wind remained strong, it was rather pleasant.

We all woke up feeling refreshed and declaring “I slept well!” All except Raye, who, on his first hiking trip, declared he was waking up all the time and had slept badly.  “Yeah, no that’s a good sleep Raye…when you don’t sleep at all, that’s a bad sleep.  When you sleep intermittently, that’s a good sleep”.  Turns out Raye had had a good sleep.

We set off and the ferocity of the storm and prevailing winds became quickly evident.  I’d not gone more than 200m when I came across James, stopped, and reaching for something in his bag.  I’ve been both curious and amazed at some of the equipment that Raye and James have bought with them.  A magnetic chess board, full sized thermos, multiple lunch sized eskies….and now, a hand saw.

There was a large tea tree across the track, limbs protruding at every angle. In one of the most gallant declarations I’ve heard in a long time, James informed me that he was going to cut all the protruding limbs away in order to make things easier for Marg, who’d been having a bit of a tough time with her broken tent pole. I really admired him for thinking so much of others, though felt compelled to tell him that it would likely be a very long day if he was going to cut away all the fallen trees.  The next time I saw him, he thanked me for my advice.

It felt great walking today! No rain and considerably less wind.  The morning consisted of pleasant forest and cliff top walking through tea tree and paperback scrub.  I took my break on a protruded sandstone platform overlooking Moonlight Bay.  The sea still looked incredibly powerful, a muddy grey now, with huge swells rolling around the points.

Limbs down!
So much damage!

The afternoon was more ups and downs.  Easy walking really, but the 14km day felt a little longer with all the ascents and descents.  The alternative route along Wreck Beach to camp was a definite impossibility, with the waves pounding right up to the cliff face and no beach to speak of.

We’ve all arrived at camp and set up, very spread out this time.  I wander along the 1km track to the “Fiji memorial” which commemorates those lost in a shipwreck in the late 1800’s.

Final day of the trail tomorrow.  It’s going to be an early start for me to ensure that I make it to the bus in time.  I need to do 16km by 2pm or so, so I will rise early, get the skates on, and hopefully fang it enough to both reach the bus stop in time, and enjoy all the final sights of the trail…including the Twelve Apostles.

The dunny had the best view of the campsite! Honestly, they were so good! Plenty of toilet paper, a light switch that came on when you entered and always an amazing window!

Great Ocean Walk, Day 4 – Johanna Beach to Ryans Den, 14km

The big news of the day, is the night.  And quite possibly the worst storm I have ever encountered whilst huddling in a tent.

First things first, and it was a pleasant surprise when James and Raye trundled into the camp site with a booming “Hey Mel!”.  I’m very pleased at the addition of a couple of people who don’t mind conversing a bit.

We briefly catch up on proceedings before I head to the table near my tent to cook up dinner.  It’s absolutely beautiful.  Calm, out of the wind.  The ocean seething down below, the sound of the waves rolling a metronome that has me in a trance. Honestly, you couldn’t ask for a better camp site experience. I even saw a couple of koalas in a tree, red eyes gleaming in my torchlight as I cleaned my teeth. Even at that point in the night it looked like a bit of a rollercoaster for them, their tree bending back and forth dangerously in the wind.

I had known, as I made my way into bed for the night, that I should be expecting a bit of rain to hit, possibly from 9pm onwards.  The wait was like an anxious boil.  The night getting hotter and hotter, the air sucked out like a vacuum.  I look at my clock…11.15pm.  Just waiting.

It starts with a patter, that turns into a pour.  The rain is fine, but then the wind. Monstrous gusts that make the tent shudder.  The rain slams into the tent  with alarming force at every push of the wind. It was both chaotic and electrifying.  I seriously wondered whether the wind was strong enough to lift the tent, me and all, and deposit it over the clifftop  and into the sea below. My poles and tent, bending at seemingly impossible angles under the force.

I noticed lights starting to flash around camp, but there was nothing to do except close my eyes, hang on tight, and hope.  It’s one of the few times I wished I had noise cancelling headphones, so I could block out the noise of the wind and the fear.

Morning arrived.  The rain stopped. I opened my tent fly and stared down at the raging white capped sea, thankful that my possessions had survived the night. A quick look around camp told me that others were not so lucky.  A broken tent pole for the quiet woman.  James and Raye had been forced to move into a one-man tent.  Everyone was a bit shell shocked.  I asked the quiet lady what she planned on doing.  She wasn’t sure.  I offered my pole repair equipment if I saw her at the next camp, and that was that.  One last look at the view and I left camp whilst the rain held off.

Not so calm after the storm!
Final view from the camp site

The morning walk consisted of roadwalking through lush green farmland and forests.  The weather varied from brilliant sunshine to spitting squall, though the wind was a constant companion.

The sun makes it look so pleasant!
Again, the photo is deceiving…
What it was actually like!

I caught up with James, who had headed off early.  James had only recently been told that he was going to be a father, and was understandably nervous.  It’s very rare for me to tell my story.  That I was once married.  That we had tried to have children.  That we were one of those unlucky couples for whom that just wasn’t on the cards.  But, because it’s the trail, and people bond quickly, I told him.  And advised him, that from my perspective, he should try to enjoy every moment of this precious journey.

I left James having a rest break and made my way down to the beach.  The ocean was fierce.  Dark, muddy blue waves.  Foam whistling into the air.  It did it’s very best to try and claim me for its own!

View looking towards the beach walk
At the end of the beach walk…check out the water in the background…
And a little bit more…..

From the beach, the last 5km consisted of a pleasant track winding in and out of forest and rainforest gullies.  Although it was mostly an uphill walk, with quite a few steps, it didn’t feel taxing and I made camp by around 1.15pm.

Problematically, the wind was still raging, and the the campsite offered very little in the way of sheltered sites.  I felt quite lucky as the first to reach camp that I could try and choose the best fit for me.

One by one everybody staggered in, and places were found for all.  The quiet lady, Marg’s, tent pole was fixed as best we could.  With one-man tents she will be sharing a tentsite which was reasonably out of the wind, with Raye.  James, in his tarpaulin, will set up in the shelter and the Mexican fellow, Augustin, will more or less set up on the track. 

My site is muddy, and pretty gross.  But I’m sitting inside dry, and because of the buffeting shelter, very safe. My tent is barely moving in the raging gale around me.

Things are supposed to quieten down around midnight.  Fingers and toes crossed that they do.

View from the lookout at the campsite
Braving the wind

Great Ocean Hike, Day 3 – Aire River to Johanna Beach, 14km

Well this day had a bit of everything! First thing to contend with, the stairs to the toilets.  I note to myself that the magical nighttime restoration fairies have been and I’m feeling back in the game.

I hear a teacher from the group down below, a boys school apparently, yell “Packs on boys!  We’ve got a bit of an uphill first thing…so keep your jumpers off!”

Great, I think to myself….they must be headed the other way, up the sand dune….Hooray! I set off.  And don’t get far before I detect the inane gaggle of semi- prepubescent boys.  They are headed my way!  Decision time.  Wait and let them pass.  Or fang it.  I fang it.  But they fang it even quicker. After a game of cat and mouse which lasts a couple of kilometres, me staying ahead by millimetres, they pass.  I step aside and wait for the 20 or so young fellows to trudge past me.  I start again.  And realise they have stopped.  Getting drinks out of their backpacks.  Resting.  I sigh and walk through the middle of them again.

The walk is pleasant.  Softly rolling with occasional views out to the ocean.  What’s this? My mates are back.  They pass, this time a few of the bolder ones saying hello and thanking me for moving aside.  I walk another 200m and spy them, stopped again.  One explains that they need to wait for the teachers and they accidentally keep catching up to me right before they have to wait.  All good mate.  No stress.  Catch you in a bit.

The view really opens up now and I’m descending down very close to the beach.  Sandstone hues paint the beach yellow, and the sea is a cold, icy blue.  The boys pass me again.  Comment on the views.  I wait this time.  The teachers pass too.  I don’t see any of them again.  Such is hiking.

You know I love my track photos!

Through a woodland forest and down to the beach.  I notice on my way down that blustery has become an understatement. I request a forecast from my trusty Garmin.  Hitting the beach, I realise it’s incredibly windy…and blowing straight from the direction in which I want to go.  This is going to be a tough couple of kilometres!  Garmin dings….Windy.  Up to 80km/hr gusts.  Hell.

First view of the upcoming beach walk
I have arrived!
Windswept, windswept, windswept

I make a start.  Smashing my poles into the sand so I can get traction forward.  It’s hard not to be blown off my feet.  Shells and sand and grit slam into my legs and eyes.  Beautiful.  But just a little too windy for comfort. And a final insult at the end, whereby, in a rookie mistake I get caught out by a wave crossing an inlet.  Wet shoes and socks.  Bummer.  My only consolation is that it is supposed to be raining all day tomorrow anyway. 

The campsite is to die for.  And in an incredibly lucky turn of events, the view side is protected from the gale force winds.  I can feel smug both from an aesthetic and safety perspective! 

Room with a view

There is a little wallaby hanging around camp and I relax mesmerised by the pounding waves.  The wind has caused the swell to rise, and there are some real behemoths making their way to shore.  It’s destined to be a quiet night.  The lady who is not up for company or conversation has set up in the wind on the other side of the campground.  And the Mexican fellow from the first night has arrived…and as I didn’t glean anything from him that night, I assume he’s quiet as well.

Oh well, we’re all going to be tucked up and sheltering from the rain anyhow…

Great Ocean Walk, Day 2 – Blanket Bay to Aire River Campground, 20km

It was a bit of a drizzly night, but I was nice and warm and slept relatively well considering it was the first night back in the tent.

I was ready quickly and the first to depart camp.  Unlike all the other people I had met last night, I was doing another “jump” and travelling past the next camp at Cape Otway, to Aire River.

It was another epic day!  Gloriously overcast, but with no rain (except for a few squally showers), it was a day made for hiking!

The highlight of the morning was reaching the Parker Inlet.  Within sight, the rain was coming down in a cold drizzle, yet when I got onto the beach, dazzling sunshine. Again, I recognised that feeling you get with long distance hiking, when you see a beautiful location through sheer hard work alone. That feeling of pride and gratefulness never diminishes.

Parker Inlet was a lovely spot to see!

I reached the lighthouse at Cape Otway fairly quickly, and decided to press on rather than pay a visit.  I’ve been there before, and I wanted to keep going whilst the going was good.  I struck up a conservation with a couple of rangers on a lunch break.  It was nice to talk to them about “the business”.  One of the rangers had seen the recent “Last Dog on the Moon” cartoon about the Advena Campbellii snails on Norfolk…and so had plenty of questions to ask about that!

I had a quick break at the Otway campground and then pressed on.  It was relatively easy walking in the afternoon.  Nice flat, easy track winding through coastal vegetation before being propelled out to another stellar view. I saw a couple of wallabies, yellow faced black cockatoos and heaps of other little birds, particularly wrens.  The presence of the sandstone cliffs made themselves more apparent, standing bare above the might of the toiling sea.

The track into Aire River ended in a long, steep, very sandy descent, before traversing a bridge to reach the camp. The walkers campsites have been so great so far…but what’s with the steep stairs from the toilet block back up to the campsite at this one!!  Haha! There were a couple of very slow movers on those stairs…not nice when you are feeling ridiculously stiff from the walking!

It gets hard to know what to take a photo of!  The coast line is so amazing, but all the photos look very similar!  It’s hard to even know where was where now!
Aire River
Bridge into Aire River

Initially, there is only one woman at the campsite, whom very much seems to want to keep to herself.  I’m not expecting she will be a talkative travelling companion.  Oh well.  Each to their own. A school group eventually showed up, but one of the teachers took mercy on me and said they would camp down the bottom of the stairs.  I thanked him heartily.

An early dinner, a beautiful (but deadly), slinky fox patrolling the campsite, moonlit stroll back and forth over the bridge a few times to stretch the legs, and then a dive into bed.  A very satisfying day.

Great Ocean Walk, Day 1: Apollo Bay to Blanket Bay, 23km

I’m back on the road again!  And so keen, that I wake early with a jolt…must do one final check and go! Sadly, it was still dark outside and my enthusiasm was stopped at the door.  I’m not usually one to be up for sunrise, but with little to do, and still needing to go to the shops for one final thing before departing, it seemed only sensible. I made a cuppa and headed for the beach.

Not for the first time, I berated myself for not being more proactive about sunrises.  This one was spectacular, misty blues and oranges on a deserted windswept beach.  It felt like a good omen.

Keen as a sunrise

So did the sausage roll I purchased from the bakery, and with a full stomach and everything procured, I headed off in the bright light of day.

What a treat the first 10km of the walk was!  Sun beaming, cornflour blue skies, clifftop views of gently rolling waves and broad rocky platforms.  It was an absolutely impressive start to the trip, and I found myself smiling with the sheer beauty of it.  It felt good to be back in the saddle.

How good to be following a track again!
The walk weaves in and out of these gorgeous rocky bays
Giant kelp bringsB the flies in over the rocks
Best view coming up over a hill
I had only myself for company…didn’t see another walker until I got to camp

The morning passed quickly, as time in beautiful places often does. A little leg weary I pulled into Elliot Ridge campground.  I had decided previously that creating time by skipping a couple of campgrounds would be a great idea.  Yeah!  More time in Melbourne and visiting family at the end!  My brain still agreed with this in principle…the body, not so much.

So after a brief hiatus, I headed off again.  The afternoon was spent in what my brain now refers to as “Australian Eucalypt Forest”.  You know what I mean…?  They all look sort of the same….nice, without being spectacular. Large, impressive trees dotted amongst bracken fern, banksias and sedges.  

Australian Eucalypt Forest!
My new shoes didn’t stay clean for very long!

At one point I noticed the sky visibly darken.  I became alarmed, and urgently requested a weather report from my Garmin.  It obediently started whirring away, desperate to give me the answers I was seeking.  Alas, before the information was forthcoming, a huge, fat drop followed by an almighty BOOOOMMMM, signalled that a thunderstorm was forthcoming.  Weather signs 1, Garmin 0. 

The sky darkens….
Time to lickety split!

My legs, which had been feeling particularly weary now accelerated with a second wind.  All I knew was that the sky was ripping apart around me, tall trees swaying dangerously in the ever increasing wind, and that I wanted to get off this plateau as quickly as possible.  I was very lucky that there wasn’t a lot of lightning around.  Just the occasional shimmer in the air,  meaning I was able to somewhat enjoy the tremendous force of the performance around me. My Garmin dinged….current conditions…..thunderstorm. Thanks for that.

I reached camp at Blanket Bay with just enough time to set up before another deluge.  Straight into the tent and into some warm clothes, wondering how long this forced imprisonment might last.

An hour or so later and I wandered down to the under cover seating area, and met James, Raye, Jackie and a Mexican fellow, all of whom had left Apollo Bay the day previously and stayed up at Eliot campsite last night.  They were a talkative lot – Raye on his first long distance walk (and carrying approximately 3kg of trail mix), James who was interested in Norfolk and wondering how to become a ranger, and Jackie, a solo hiker like myself, slightly older than me, and enjoying balancing a diminishing work life with time on the trails.  We had a very interesting conversation around the question we always get asked “Aren’t you scared of getting killed or hurt?” and putting the risk of that occurring on the trail into context with everyday living and the proclivity of domestic violence.  I’m guessing that for many, just being at home is a much more realistic way of getting hurt.

My sleeping bag called to me early, so not long after dark I was tucked away nice and safe in my beloved tent,  hoping that the fairies do their overnight magic, and I wake up tomorrow good as new.

Great Ocean Walk (and a rather late finish on the last post)

A year on.  I’m sitting in an enormous apartment suite in Apollo Bay, hiking gear askew around the room. A typical scene for a holiday.  As always, and despite everything, I have pre-hike nerves.  A nervous rolling in the belly that will only settle by taking the first steps on the trail, with or without all the gear I require.

Looking back, I realise I have been very slack, having not finished off the blog on the last walk!  Life hey…it gets in the way of the best of intentions.

I do have my notes here with me, which I will now cordially disperse and see if any of it jogs my memory.

This is what I’ve got:

Sharing camp with a goanna”….I don’t really remember it, but I assume I had a goanna slinking through my campsite.

Murrumbooee Cascades”….Ah yes.  This was my rest day.  I was up very early on account of the heat.  Made my way along a scenic path of several kilometres to reach the cascades.  There was nobody there and the sunshine was beautiful.  As it was still so early, the water was crisp with the overnight chill. I found a deep, little pool and in the early morning haze, jumped right in.  I remember screaming with the cold.

Scenic walkway
Soaking up the sun
Before being very brave!

Dandahra Falls”…A side trip.  Signage that described a steep and overgrown track.  Signage that was correct.  Eventually reaching the falls, dodging branches and sliding down gravelly banks. It was boiling hot, and there was no water….just the view of the narrow falls over yonder in the distance.  I sat around with a family for a while, lamenting having come all the way to the bottom.  We reluctantly returned to the top and I reached camp, a sweaty, dirt laden mess.

Before it got unwieldy
Lyrebird Rock
Still unsure if the walk was really worth it….

Arvo @ favourite place Barra Nulla”….Best part of the walk.  Relaxing all afternoon, mostly on my own, with my book.  Dipping in and out of my perfect little bath-like waterhole whenever I liked.  Perfection. 

Best bathtub in the world!

That is all the notes I took.  I remember the rest day was great and I felt on top of the world finishing the final 10km, most of which was uphill, the following day.  Another completed walk!

I’m excited about this trip.  Can’t wait to see what the trail and weather gods have in store for me.  Unseeasonal heat equals unseasonal storms equals tricky conditions. But hell, I’m training for Scotland next year, so perhaps I should be in the mindset of bring it on! (But gently please….)

A brand new start

No better feeling than being back at the beach. 

Day 3 – WGR World Heritage Walk – 21.4km

It was a pleasant evening curled up in the sleeping bag listening to the boobooks gossip amongst themselves. I love hearing the boobooks so much! Back on Norfolk, a key component of my job is to try and conserve the Norfolk Island Morepork (morepork = kiwi term for boobook), one of the rarest birds in the world. They are actually a hybrid between the last remaining Norfolk morepork and a couple of NZ moreporks that were ferried to Norfolk in 1985 to try and save the species. We only have around 26 of these special birds left, and lack of genetic diversity makes it difficult for them to breed. Every single new chick is a little ecological miracle. And they are so close to the brink. So it is absolutely lovely to hear these boobooks calling with abandon.

I set my alarm with the intention of starting early, knowing it’s been so hot, and that this is the longest day of the walk. The air is cool and fresh when I awake, and I slip away before the rest of the camp stirs.

It’s a steep uphill to begin with. I use my fail safe technique and reach the top in no time. Before long, I move from a fire trail to a single lane track, which makes for the best of walking conditions. The feature of the morning, and what I’m looking out for, is the Dandahra Crags.

The uphill climb
Can’t beat a single track!
Couple of roses next to a thorn

Following a stunning morning of eucalypts and warratahs, the lemony scent and the slash of colour, I pop out onto a vast yellow plain. Not a tree in sight. Muted, sun drenched colours. And the crags standing in silhouette, dominating the arid looking plain. It’s definitely time for a rest stop!

Bone dry creek, looking back to the treeline
The Dendahra Crags
Spectacular landscape

I turn away from the crags and wander beside a foul smelling creek. The lack of water is obvious here. Bridges crossing bone dry dirt. Flies drone in the midday sun.

A crossroad. A sign. And a person. We say hello. He asks me about my pack. If nothing else, it’s a great conversation starter. He’s a day tripper and smells of pine fresh. We are headed the same way, so it’s time to get out of my comfort zone and initiate some awkward small talk. Turns out we had a bit in common. He was German, (not in common) but had lived in Australia for a long time. “Grew up” on the north coast of NSW (common), always goes hiking / camping on holidays (common), was a biology post doc (commonish), and was all about conservation (common). He told me he was working on a big make or break project, and would try for another year to achieve success. I asked what the project was. “Have you ever heard of…..maggot therapy?” he said. I have but, (not common). He was wanting to go back to the old days. Use maggots instead of antibiotics to cure wounds, especially on the battlefield. It was a rather fascinating, and wholly unexpected conversation.

I feel like we’d only just begun to delve into the topic when we rounded the corner, and there, like a mirage, was a huge, glorious swimming hole! My allegiances were torn. Find out more about the maggots. Or dive into the sparkling blue swimming hole after a hot, old day on the track. Is it telling of my personality to say there was no competition? The swim won out. I asked if he wanted to join me, but he explained he didn’t have his swimmers. I didn’t bother to explain that neither did I. That undies are the swimmers of the future.

Who could go past this beauty?

I has thought that we might finish our conversation at the camp if he was there, but I never saw him again. I didn’t even get his name. I hope his rather extraordinary venture is successful. Meanwhile, I enjoyed a sublimely refreshing swim. In my underwear.

Creekside scenery enroute to camp

It was a quick 3km to camp. After wandering the campsite I found my pre-booked spot right in the very middle of all the action. Awash with “keep out” tape where the vegetation used to be. I sat at my table and looked around. Encircled by visitors on all sides. School holiday crowds. Very few privacy trees. Not even my personal tap was working.

It’s strange how these sorts of disappointments take on a whole extra level when you are solo hiking. Instead of just being independent, I have to go and ask somebody if I can fill my water at their tap. All around me are cars and every conceivable piece of comfort and gear, kids, and family and friends. I’m surprised by the feeling of loneliness and isolation I’m feeling. I’m supposed to be enjoying a “rest” day here tomorrow to experience all the local walks without the burden of my pack, but instead I find myself seriously considering just moving on. I unpack, feeling like a circus show exhibit, and decide to walk to the nearby Nulla Falls.

It is beautiful. Rockpools of all shapes and sizes, gushing water, and a feeling of calm. I’m the only one there. I sit and relax. Take in my surroundings. Realise I’m lucky, Realise I want to be there. Realise I don’t want to leave.

Mulligan’s Hut
The beautiful Nulla Falls
My tranquil little swimming spot

Back at camp, the groups are gathering around their campfires. I see people using all sorts of paraphernalia to get theirs alight. And even then, with trouble at times. The tiniest little tuft of grass. And patience. That’s all I need. Feeding the smallest of slithers from the firewood stack, slowly onto the flames. It makes me feel accomplished. Capable. A survivor. I decide I am definitely staying here another night.

The definition of satisfied

Day 2 – WGR World Heritage Walk – 18.1 km

I slept amazingly well listening to the frogs happily chirping all night long. I wasn’t sure what had happened when I eventually woke up, hot in my tent, the sun streaming in. 8.15am! Unbelievable! Something about being the only camper in a walk-in only site makes me feel extremely secure. That, and the frogs.

So it was a late start whilst I had my cuppa and took stock of affairs.

Positive – I’d had a good night’s sleep, It was only 10km to Boundary camp with a few extra side trips. One 10 Amp battery pack working. A pack of matches (7 years old and thrown in at last minute) which are working.

Negatives – Dodgy bag. Supplies a little bit dodgy. Not enough coffee for one (terrible rookie mistake) and the coffee I did have hadn’t seen sunlight for more than 7 years and was two years expired. Same with my sunscreen (it’s a long story). Probably not quite enough unhealthy snacks. Pillow not replaced or repaired following previous trip, and, surprise surprise, it’s still deflating at night. One dead 20 Amp battery pack (checked but now not working – and bloody heavy!). A torch that must have turned on by itself and drained the battery. One bar left. The ignition on my stove no longer working. No cigarette lighter.

All in all, not too bad.

Negative – it is already blisteringly hot.

Positive – it is time to get going.

The start of the day was a nice, little uphill. Just to get the pulses flowing. At the top, five minutes later, I couldn’t bear it any longer, so stopped and readjusted my bag again. To my utter relief, whatever I did seemed to work a charm, because when I shouldered it again, it felt somewhat “pleasant”.

I set off, admiring the dry Australian bush with its hazy colours, delicate scent and abundant birdlife. An interesting looking rock stack loomed in the distance and provided a marker by which to measure distance walked.

Enroute to the “Haystack”

A small sign indicted the turnoff to Duffer Falls, which I imagined to be a gloriously blue haven; cold water splashing and the thrum of the cascade. I hastily abandoned my pack, having long ago gotten over the fear of somebody stealing my belongings. Armed with just my water and small towel, I skipped along the path towards watery salvation. Down, down, down and down some more. Mildly beginning to question why I couldn’t hear the roar.

I reached the bottom to find a family, seated on the rocks, one small child running their hands through a meagre looking puddle. My despair must have shown, for they were quick to inform me that if I walked upstream a little, I would come to a “trickle” with enough water to lie in. This sounded like better than nothing to me!

Bottom of Duffer Falls

A short clamber, and there, as promised, was the pool looking majestic in the heat, despite it’s lack of grandeur. With the place to myself, I stripped and breathed a sigh of joy and anticipation as the rush of the icy cold water hit my sweltering body. Nothing like cooling off on a hot day, and reaping the reward for effort.

Duffer Falls not exactly roaring…
but perfect for a much needed swim!!

As I set off for the top I passed another small family who had just reached the bottom. I recognised the despair on their faces as they surveyed the parched scene. With a grin I let them know that if they just walked upstream a little they would come to a trickle, enough to swim! Smiles ensued.

Back at the top, with just 3km to camp, I powered along the mostly flat track, aiming to arrive relatively early and beat the afternoon heat. Off to the side of the track, a red beacon glinted at me, and I turned to stare. A beautiful Gilbralter Range Warratah, so graceful in its blatant beauty, a solo pop of colour in the pale greens and yellows of the bush.

The oh, so special Gibraltar Range Warratah

On arrival at camp, I set up at my designated camp site and gulped down some water. Too hot to lie in the tent, I dawdled around the campsite visiting Lyrebird Falls and then braving the stairs to Boundary Pool. This was more like what I had envisaged earlier in the day with a cascading torrent, black water that you know even before feeling it is going to be cold, and logs and debris scattered along the shore. Another bracing swim!

Lyrebird Falls off in the distance
Boundary Pool complete with roaring waterfall
Boundary Pool gorge

A pleasant day was topped off with a spot of spotlighting in the evening, scaring Euros (and myself!) in the process! Tomorrow is the longest day of the walk!

Relaxing back at camp
Home for the night